- Frank Springer
Frank Springer (born
December 6 ,1929 ) is an Americancomic book andcomic strip artist best known forMarvel Comics ' "Dazzler " and "Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D."; and, withwriter Michael O'Donoghue , for one of the first adult-oriented comics features in the U.S., "The Adventures of Phoebe Zeit-Geist ", in the magazine "Evergreen Review ".Biography
Early life and career
Springer graduated from Malverne High School in Malverne,
Long Island , New York, in 1948, and fromSyracuse University with an art degree in 1952. He then served with theU.S. Army through 1954, and the following year became assistant tocartoonist George Wunder on the comic strip "Terry and the Pirates ", on which Wunder had succeeded famed creatorMilt Caniff . Leaving in 1960 to freelance, Springer broke into comic books two years later withDell Comics ' "Brain Boy ", starring a telepathic government agent created byHerb Castle andGil Kane in "Four Color Comics" #1330 (June 1962). Springer drew the spin-off series' five-issue run of #2-6 (Sept. 1962 - Nov. 1963).ilver Age comics
During the remainder of the 1960s and early and '70s period fans and historians call the
Silver Age of comic books , Springer became a prolificpenciler -inker across much of Dell's line, drawing issues of "Ghost Stories", "Movie Classic", "Tales from the Tomb", "", and themovie /TV tie-in series "The Big Valley ", "Charlie Chan ", "Iron Horse" and "The New People", among other comics.He debuted at
DC Comics with two comics the same month: penciling "Batman " #197, and both penciling and inking the lead feature, "Dial H for Hero ", in "House of Mystery " #171 (both Dec. 1967). Springer went on to draw an issue each of "Detective Comics " and "Our Army at War"; ananthological story in another "House of Mystery"; and the first two issues of "Secret Six" — the initial one perhaps uniquely beginning its story on the cover rather than on the inside page one. After that smattering, however, he found more regular work at rivalMarvel Comics .There he made an auspicious if unenviable debut on a fill-in issue of the highly acclaimed and influential writer-artist
Jim Steranko 's signature series, "Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D." #4 (Sept. 1968) — penciling and inking anorigin-story retelling (scripted byRoy Thomas ) sandwiched between Steranko's final two issues. Springer nonetheless soldiered on, succeeding the departed Steranko and drawing issues #6-11 (Nov 1968 - April 1969), with Steranko providing the the famous covers of #6-7.Springer additionally drew "Captain Marvel" #13-14 (May-June 1969) and a Hercules back-up story in "
Ka-Zar " #1 (Aug. 1970) before concentrating on his ongoing Dell work until 1973, when that company ceased publication.Later comic books
", among others, and also inked many Marvel and DC Comics.
He then became regular inker of Marvel's "The Savage She-Hulk" over
Mike Vosburg during issues #10-22 (Nov. 1980 - Nov. 1981). He penciled a longer run of thesuperheroine series "Dazzler " from #4-31 & 35 (June 1981 - March 1984 & Jan. 1985), plus the Dazzler stories in "What If?" Vol. 1, #34 (Aug. 1982) and "Marvel Graphic Novel" #12 (1984). Springer, additionally, wrote "Dazzler" #27-28 and co-wrote (withJim Shooter ) #29 (July-Nov. 1983)Springer's other 1980s comics include issues of Marvel's "Conan the Barbarian" and its
toy -license titles based on the propertiesG.I. Joe and Transformers; and, for DC, a return to the Secret Six in "Action Comics Weekly", and issues of "Manhunter" and "Green Arrow ", issue #68 (Nov. 1992) of which was Springer's last known comics work.Miscellanea includes the
Atlas/Seaboard series "Cougar" in the 1970s, andContinuity Comics ' "Armor" in the 1990s.Adult satire
With the dark-humor writer-provocateur
Michael O'Donoghue — who a decade later would be the first head writer of NBC's groundbreaking TVcomedy series "Saturday Night Live " — Springer from 1965-66 worked on "The Adventures of Phoebe Zeit-Geist ", one of the first mature-audience comics in the U.S. Appearing in the magazine "Evergreen Review ", it joined such features as "Playboy "'s "Little Annie Fanny " and Magazine Enterprises' "The Adventures of Pussycat " as sexually oriented comics features in mainstream media — variously ahead of the nascent or not-yet-existingunderground comix . "Zeit-Geist", unlike its innocently bawdy contemporaries, had a darker, sometimes brutal edge, with scenes of bondage depicted as torture rather thanBettie Page -like playfulness. "Evergreen Review" publisherGrove Press collected the series as a 1968 book.Springer also drew the series "Frank Fleet" for "Evergreen Review" from 1969-70, and from 1971-88 was a regular contributor to the satiric magazine "National Lampoon", under the
pseudonyms Francis Hollidge and Bob Monhegan.Comic strips and cartoons
After having assisted Wunder on "Terry and the Pirates" from 1955-60 and then moving to comic books, Springer returned to comic strips as penciler of the syndicated
newspaper strip "Rex Morgan, M.D. " from 1979-81. He also drew the "Incredible Hulk" newspaper strip, starring the Marvel Comics'antihero ; the romance strip "The Virtue of Vera Valiant", with writerStan Lee ; and "The Adventures of Hedley Kase" in the 1990s. Springer's cartoon art has appeared in "Games Magazine", "Muppets Magazine", the New York "Daily News", "Playboy", "Sports Illustrated for Kids", and elsewhere.In the 1960s, he did unspecified work on the
animated TV series "Space Ghost ".Later years
Springer and wife Barbara Bunting, whom he married in 1956, moved to Maine in 1995, where the artist has since worked in the medium of
oil painting . The couple have five grown children. In 1982, just shy of his 53rd birthday, Springer ran theNew York City Marathon .Awards
*
National Cartoonists Society Reuben Award — Comic Books (Story): 1973, 1977, 1981
*Inkpot Award : 2004Quotes
Springer at 2004
Comic-Con International : "There were some raggedy times, but I always had work, raised five kids, bought some houses, bought some cars ... I've been lucky". [ [http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=3968 "Comic Book Resources" (July 23, 2004): "CCI, Day 2: CCI Awards Golden and Silver Age Greats", by Greg Hatcher] ]Footnotes
References
* [http://reuben.org/ncs/members/biogs/springer.asp National Caroonists Society mini-autobiography]
* [http://www.lambiek.net/artists/s/springer_frank.htm Lambiek Comiclopedia: Frank Springer]
* [http://www.comics.com Grand Comics Database]
* [http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/ The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators] ]
* [http://www.toonopedia.com/brainboy.htm Don Markstein's Toonopedia: Brain Boy]
* [http://hometown.aol.com/comicsproj/creditsR.html The Comic Strip Project Credits: "Rex Morgan, M.D."]
*"The World Encyclopedia of Comics', edited by Maurice Horn (Philadelphia, Chelsea House, 1999), entry pp. 722-723
*"The Who's Who of American Comic Books", by Jerry Bails & Hames Ware (Detroit, Mich.: J. Bails, 1973-1976), entries pp. 251, 332
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